Over the Hump - Trident Pipeline Would be a Game-Changer for Gulf Coast LNG Terminals

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Wednesday, 11/06/2024  Published by: John Abeln  rbnenergy.com

One of the most prevalent stories in the U.S. natural gas market over the past decade has been soaring associated gas production in the Permian Basin and the question of what to do with it. Numerous pipelines have been built over the years connecting Permian gas to demand regions, and more are in the works. The largest source of incremental demand is LNG exports, mostly from the Sabine River area at the Texas/Louisiana border. The catch is, getting Permian gas past Houston to the banks of the Sabine presents significant challenges. In today’s RBN blog, we’ll discuss Kinder Morgan’s proposed Trident Pipeline — an attempt to overcome those challenges — and explain why this new outlet would alter gas pricing and flow dynamics in the broader Gulf Coast region. 

We at RBN have written about existing and planned gas pipelines out of the Permian many times in the past, recently cataloguing a number of proposed lines in Come Dancing. While that piece primarily covered projects that originate in West Texas, we also snuck in WhiteWater Midstream’s Blackfin Pipeline, which was to be constructed entirely in the eastern half of Texas, bringing gas from Colorado County (near one terminus of the four-year-old Permian Highway Pipeline) north around Houston, ending in the area just north of Beaumont, where other lines would bring gas to LNG terminals in the Sabine River area. Also on the list from that blog was Energy Transfer’s proposed Warrior Pipeline, which would bring gas from the Permian to the area just south of Dallas-Fort Worth. Gas could then move toward the Sabine River through existing intrastate systems (and potentially new ones).

A few months later, Oceanfront Property told the story of the proposed DeLa Pipeline, which would bring “wet” gas all the way from the Permian Basin to gas processing plants in Louisiana. These proposals all identified the need to bridge the gap between the Sabine River region and new gas coming out of the Permian. That need has become more acute than ever now that Matterhorn Express Pipeline started reporting flows on October 1. Matterhorn will ultimately transport 2.5 Bcf/d from the Permian to the area just west of Houston. Now, a new proposal by pipeline giant Kinder Morgan (KM) may be the solution for moving excess Permian gas to the Sabine.

On October 14, KM announced an open season for its Trident Pipeline project: a 48- and 42-inch pipeline that would run from Katy, TX, just west of Houston to the Sabine River, terminating at the Golden Pass LNG export facility in Port Arthur. The next day, Golden Pass Chief Commercial Officer Jeff Hammad announced at the Gulf Coast Energy Forum that Golden Pass had committed to be an anchor shipper on Trident. Golden Pass, a 70/30 joint venture of QatarEnergy (Qatar’s national oil and gas company) and ExxonMobil, is what we would call a very creditworthy counterparty. KM indicated in its open season announcement that it was negotiating with more than one anchor shipper.

The difficulty of getting gas from locations like Katy to the Sabine is that most routes are highly challenging. The most direct path would plow straight through the Houston area, and while the nation’s fourth-most-populous city may be more amenable than most to the pipeline business, negotiating right-of-way agreements across more than a hundred miles of suburban and urban properties would be a Herculean task. (KM does hold significant right of way in Houston for its Texas and Tejas systems.) Instead, the choice has been for Trident to move north around the heavily populated areas before heading over to Port Arthur. This approach has its own challenges, the first being that it’s a long way north to actually avoid those populated areas. Then, the Sam Houston National Forest comes into play. It would make sense that KM would want to avoid having to get federal permits to cross the forest, especially after the ordeal Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) went through regarding the Jefferson National Forest in Virginia. The huge advantage enjoyed by the Texas intrastate market is the avoidance of extended delays, so staying away from federal permitting seems immensely wise.

 

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